About this item
Highlights
- Since the earliest days of the United States, some parents have felt moved to capture their political moment in their children's names.
- About the Author: R. Urbatsch is professor of political science at Iowa State University.
- 256 Pages
Description
About the Book
This book explores the politics of naming across American history, revealing the surprising ways parents' choices shed light on public opinion past and present.Book Synopsis
Since the earliest days of the United States, some parents have felt moved to capture their political moment in their children's names. A Massachusetts child received the name Federal Constitution in 1790. The nineteenth century saw the name States Rights crop up across the South. A younger brother of a boy called McKinley in the early twentieth century was disproportionately likely to be named Roosevelt. Residents of areas that supported Reagan were prone to choose the spelling "Meagan" over "Megan." The name Hillary surged in popularity after the Clintons emerged on the political scene--then crashed just as dramatically. What do trends like these tell us about political identities and enthusiasms in the United States?
R. Urbatsch explores the politics of naming across American history, revealing the surprising ways parents' choices shed light on public opinion past and present. He argues that naming is a weathervane for political attitudes: Names touch on every sort of identity, from race and gender to nationalism and religion. Tracing the rise and fall of names that evoked the leaders, ideas, and issues that fired political imaginations of their times, Urbatsch opens new windows onto a wide range of historical questions. By analyzing when politics-tinged names gained or lost popularity, this book offers an unconventional and illuminating new perspective on identity, public sentiment, and political behavior in the United States.About the Author
R. Urbatsch is professor of political science at Iowa State University. He is the author of Families' Values: How Parents, Siblings, and Children Affect Political Attitudes (2014).